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Refmed Home Living Convenient to our best clubs, stores, churches, schools and movies, but off the noisy high- ways, nothing quite equals the Shannon and Luchs Forest Section of Chevy Chase, Md. Here we have takes the house that has ordinarily given four fair sized bedrooms and produced but three with two baths. But WHAT SIZABLE ROOMS AND WHAT COM-. FORT AFFORDED THE ERSONS WHO PAY FOR Tk HOME HAS BEEN GAINED. A master bed sui additional space if required. Beautiful garden, yards, two- car built-in garages. finishing. ‘WE CONFESS TO THEIR BEING QUITE LUXURI- OUS AND APPEAL 3 MORE TO PERSONS HAV- ING HAD EXPERIENCE IN CROWDED HOUSES, But Aren’t You Entitled to That Sort of Living? Easy Terms TO INSPECT Drive out Conn. Ave. to Chery o e Lane, TRET Cwo” savarcs tosur. sien our (Red Arrow), follow RIGHT to propert [SHANNON & LUCHY| 1435 K St MUSICAL STUDIOS Studio at LEVIN ANNOUNCES " QPENING OF &, Ukulele Pot. 50! gtween 6 and 8 D. i' EDUCATIONAL. . EVENING HIGH SCHOOL Fully Accredited Washington Preparatory School Enroll no:v—coenurnlmgnlA 1736 G S « 7 National 8250 MOUNT IPLEASANT SCHOOL for ScopraRIcs Tivoli Theater Building 3313 14th St. N.W., Col. 3000 CCOUNTANCY | Pace Courses; B. C. S. lnll M. C. S. Degrees; Day Evening Classes; C. P. A. Preparation; Co-educational Send for 25th Year Book Benjamin Franklin University 802_Transportation Bldg. Met. 2515 National University Registration Now Open SCHOOL OF LAW School of Economics and Government Registrar's Office Open for Registration 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 818 13th STREET N.W. Tel. Na. 6617, 000000000000000000000000 Felix Mahony’s {National Art School Qur _Eight-Month Professional Courses | Fit You to Accept a Position in_ Color, Interior Decoration, Design Commerclal, Art, ildren’s Saturday Reg- Nter now.. Bestos Oct. 5. Open 9 A to 9 P.M. 1747 R. I. Ave. North 1114 1 ‘-mnnwuvuu& *x¥ SPECIAL NOTICES. FPAPERHANGING — ROOMS PAPERED, 2 fand up. it you have the paper. Experlenced echanic._Call Col. 3568, 0% PPLES FOR SALE BALLINCARA BAKER chard, Germantown, Md. Pick your own from ground, ‘25c per_bushel: from 2" Prime apples. Pine varieties. ._Bring baskets. 11¢ MR, JACOB HAMBURGER 1S NO LONGER r%]g'xz:ud Tith the real estate office of A. T. st. nw. LLYWDOD ORCHARD. ut Georgis ave. 3 miles Dlsl D. C. line beuuom fitered cider, 40c m, bring, conlllnen Mlnlea ’75: ver us f 11+ St n.w. Metropolitan 1844. WINETH FARMS Pive miles from D. 8. ave. iFor® Blimes Goigén. - eltcions, WiRter anana and Smoke House appies, §1 bushel. ider, 40c gal. in your container. J. E. WEISMAN. Proprietor. __ * Apples and Sweet Cider AT QUAINT ACRES Thousands of baskets of choice fruit at wery low prices. Grimes Golden, Delicious, Btayman, Winesap, Old Fashioned Winesap, York, efc. ~Special “school lunch size, in geveral varieties. Sweet cider made on’ the farm from carefully selected fruit. no pre- Drive out through Silvér Spring, on Colesville pike (Route 27). nly 5 miles from the Distric APPLES—CIDER w-at low prices. Chilcott Bros, Vienna, Va. GRAPE JUICE for sale at Terrnlrul Refrlleunnf Corp., LI ShE 2 oot “Bros. R lenug " d8-P-5. YOUR ROOF, TOO an be sound, tight, free from leaks. g0 through another Winter with plaster - musty, moldy ' rooms? Call us hy falling Sive big repatr i COMPANY N NES, We also pack and TEEL LIFT VANS anvwhere. | TRANSFER & STORAG! 1313_You_St. N.W._Phone North 3343 5Suis. APPLES, SWEET CIDER Grimes _Golden and_ Delicious apples, Stayman Wineseps, York Imperials. Sweet cider made from clean. hand-picked apples: rive to Rockville, Md.. 2 blocks bevond curt, House, then on mile out Potomac rd. ockville Fruit Farm "Intelligent Co-operation —1s always avallable at Washington's newest Print Shop regardless of the size of the order. The National Capital Press _FLA. AVE. 3rd_and N IT’S GETTIN COLD No® R0 £o0 sman Setimates for full pnru:ums ISOUTHERN NATIONS SEEK REDISCOUNTS |Conference of Central Banks at Lima Will Discuss Plan for U. S. Help. By the Associated Press. LIMA, Peru, October 10.—The Bo- livian legation announced Thursday that at the forthcoming meetings of the Central Banks of Peru, Chile, Co- lombia, Ecuador and Bolivia an at- tempt would be made “to reach an agreement with the Washington Federal Reserve | Board to establish a rediscount system.” Other purposes of the meeting, the announcement said, were to ‘create most intimate co-operation between South American Central Banks and also to take up other most important and urgent questions, in order to meet the present financial crisis.” The statement was issued after the Centfal Bank of Peru had announced the meetings would be held at Lima. The date has not yet been fixed. According to the Bolivian legation announcement, the Bolivian Central Bank planned the meeting through the nation’s finance and foreign ministries, and the legations at Lima, Santiago, Quito and Bogota were instructed to submit the proposal to the various gov- ernments. All replies were favorable. Brazil Halts Debt Payments. RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, October 10 (#)—A 60-day moratorium on all for- eign commercial and private payments in Brazil was put in effect yesterday by President Vargas. Argentina to Rule Exchange. BUENOS AIRES, October 10 (#).— ‘The government issued a decree Thurs- day, taking direct control of foreign ex- change negotiations, declaring it was for the purpose of safeguarding the peso. The paper peso was quoted yesterday nmclally at 4.26 to the dollar, but pri- vate dealers were quoting up to 4.80. It was indicated the government intends to compel buyers of exchange to show cause for purchases. The ministery of the treasury ordered | exporters and importers to render re- 'aons on all foreign exchange transac- ons. FOUR NAT‘URALIZED Final Papers Issued to Prince Georges Residents at Marlboro. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. 10.—Four residents of Prince Georges County received their final naturaliza- tion papers from Judge Joseph C. Mat- tingly in Circuit Court yesterday. The new citizens and_their former nationality are: Eugene Karl Marstal- ler of Cottage City, German: Dannie Ferry of Hyattsville, Irish; Peder B. Vikingstad of Colmar Manor, Nor- wegian, and Karl A. Schmelz of Cap- itol Heights, German. ‘They took their final tests before ]l‘;'atumluflon Examiner Clare T. Wil- son. ‘The new Venice-Trieste-Fiume ar- terial highway in Italy is to cost $35,000,000. UPPER MARLBORO, Md. October | THE EVENING STAR, WASH GTON, D. C., SATURDAY, 0OC TOBER 10, 1931. 1932 Stamps Show Likenesses of Washington POST OFFICE ANNOUNCES SPECIAL SERIES FOR BICENTENNJAL YEAR. of George Washington which | were executed from life, to be reproduced on a special issue of postage stamps in 12 denomina- tions, was announced today. The por- traits selected for the work were chosen by the Postmaster General in special ccnsultation with the National George ‘Washington Bicentennial Commission. The series, Tanging in _denomina- tion from 32 cent to 10 cents, is being prepared to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the birth of George Washington, and will be placed on sale ELECTION of 12 likenesses of |all over the country beginning Jan- | uary 2, 1932, and will be sold through- | outthe year. The illustration above shows, upper row, left to right: the “Virginia colonel” portrait of Washington, by Charles ‘Wilson Peale, which will appear on the 1'z-cent stamp; bust by Jeane Antoine Houdon, selected for the 1-cent stamp; miniature portrait by Charles Wilson Peale, chosen for the lz-cent stamp: the Atheneum portrait by Gilbert Stuart, which will adorn the popular 2-cent stamp; portrait of George Washington in Revolutionary costume, by Charles Wilson Peale, which will be reproduced on the 3-cent stamp, and another likeness by the same artist, which will be used for the 4-cent stamp. The lower row, left to right, shows another Peale portrait, selected for the 5-cent stamp: a John Trumbull full- |length portrait, to appear on the 6-cent | stamp; ‘an_eariier portrait by the same artist, chosen for the 7-cent stamp; a crayon physionotrace, by Charles B. F. Sount Memin, which will be repro- | duced on the 8-cent stamp; & portralt | by W. Williams, now in jon_of the Masonic Lodge of Alexandria, Va., which will be pictured on the 9-cent stamp, and the Vaughan portrait, by | Gilbert Stuart, which will be shown on the 10-cent stamp. Will Rogers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—After “Pepp” Martin fell down on me 50 hard yesterday there just ain’t much to talk about but Mr. Hoover and his “relief for frozen assets.” We had heard of all kinds of relief. drought, grasshopper and potato bug, but the general run of us didn't know that these frozen assets were in such bad shape till | this plan come along. In fact, we didn't know what a frozen asset was, but now every- thing is clear. If you got a little frozen asset in your house why the Federal Reserve will take it over. Everythings “jake” now. MANY OF YOU | PLEADS KIDNAPING GUILT Albert® A. Robbins Gets 25-Year Sentence in St. Paul Court. ST. PAUL, Minn, October 10 (#).— Albert A. Robbins, one of five men in- |.dicted for the kidnaping of Leon | Gleckman, St. Paul business man and | politician,’ yesterday entered a plea of Sullty and was sentenced to serve 25| 5 gelegation from the striking work- | years in the penitentiary. The other four men pleaded not guilty. The sixth man alleged by the State to have been implicated in the kidnaping, Frank La Pre, was found slain after Gleckman had been released. Gleckman was released after part of the ransom demand been met. —Now Realize That Your Government Is Quite Ca- pable of Protecting the In- terests of People. 100 Dollars Sna; o Washington's Built to take Homekeeping. Ever the The Question Now Is ‘What Are You Doing to PROTECT YOUR OWN INTERESTS Or Are You Still PAYING RENT? Rent Equals 67, Interest on $20,000. , Out of It Very Different Very Successful thing to an AUTOMATIC HOME Priced $13,450 to $14, Sold on Easy Protective Terms in which you make ONE PAY- MENT MONTHLY, which cludes every cost, and that is NEW RITTENHOUSE ST. AND BROAD BRANCH RD. The most highly restricted and Refined Section of CHEVY CHASE, D. C. On Top of the City IMPORTANT! American per Month See Newest Home Work out of The nearest Built. 200 in- HAVANA STRIKE ENDED El Mundo to Republish Tomorrow After Printers ProtestsCut. HAVANA, October 10 (#).—The man- agement of El Mundo, one of the news- | papers closed last week by composing | | room strikes, last night announced the | ! paper would reappear Sunday morning. | | men agreed to accept the 25 per cent reduction In salary, which caused the | walkout. "The 6ther newspapers aftected by the | | strike, Informacion and El Pals, were | published Thursday after seitling with their employes on the same basis. Horace W. Peaslee « % architect Better have us put your Furnace in Fop shae. T e PUDGET PAYMENTS if desired. 1 3 FLOOD ¢ 111 v St. N.W. my Dec. :m—mmlns. Clev. 0619, The setting of these homes virtu- ally forms a PRIVATE PARK AND NO THROUGH TRAFFIC. SEE THE FIRST FLOOR SERVICE ROOMS AND LOTS OF OTHER NEW THINGS IN THIS PRICED HOME TO INSPECT Right from Chevy Chase Circle into Western Ave., two squares to Rittenhouse Street. Right one square to Broad Branch Road. Public and Parochial Schools. DON'T PUT OFF Colony Hill is destined to become BAY STATE STRIKE OPENS 25,000 1085 22,000 Textile Workers Joined by 3,000 Longshore- men in Walkout. | By the Associated Press. BOSTON, October 10.—More than 25,000 jobs went begging in Massachu- setts yesterday as workers, incensed by announced teductions in wages or by unsatisfactory working . conditions, walked the streets on ‘strike. The strike movement, having its center in the textile city of Law- rence, where approximately 22,000 men and women-left their looms and bench- es rather than accept a 10 per cent re- duction of wages, today had spread to other centers. In Boston approximate- ly 3,000 longshoremen were refusing to handle cargo on the and for- eign vessels plying in and out of this port, although the crux of their quarrel with the ship owners was not entirely a mattef of wages, but centered with greater gravity on a working condition. In the textile city of Lowell strike talk had brewed several days and was transformed into action yesterday when more than 300 employes left one of the | mills. An announced 10 per cent wage | cut here, also, was the motivating ele- | ment. Several hundred workers in a | hosiery manufacturing plant in North- ampton, objecting to wage reductions, succeeded in forcing the closing of the plant. There was no indication of an early settlement of differences today. Lawrence Hard Hit. .| ‘The clty of Lawrence, with fts prin- cipal industry practically idle, is in the | worst predicament. Yesterday strikers’ | | pickets succeeded in drawing away suf- | | ficlent workers to cripple the last of | the large American Woolen Co. plants | to operate. 1In addition, the Pacific Mills and Arlington Milis, employlng large numbers were silenced. | _The naill owners in this cny contend | ‘ f cvERFRESH CITRATE or MAGNESIA that unless a reduction of 10 per cent in wages is made effective their mills cannot survive “the ruinous competi- tion” from other centers, where the glwmn; wages are lower and, in some ces, the working day longer. The workers, on the other hand, claim that if & 10 per cent cut is permitted the ‘wage level will have sunk considerably below the cost of living. ‘The introduction of the National Textile Workers’ Union, a Communist organization, into the affair in Law- rence has, ecivic leaders claim, in- :r;m“uuodlhn difficulty of effecting com- prt Organizer Whisked Away. Until yesterday, when the immigra- tion authorities whisked her to a de- tention station in Boston, there to await settlement of the question of her deportation, Edith Berkman, fiery young organizer for the union, has exhorted the strikers each day, and in | & recent address claimed responsibility for the strike. Her place has been taken, however, by Sophie Melvin, an- other’ young organizer. In the mean- while the United Textile Workers of America, which is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, has been rallying the wnrkers to its stand- ards, and, to a deg has had the support“of the munlcnnl authorities. ‘The trouble on the Boston water front resulted from the refusal of local owners to a wage scale recently nego- tiated by the International Longshore- men's Union for the New York dock workers. Several conferences with the shipowners brought the two factions | question of wages, but they could not \mu on other working conditions, |among them the weight of the sling ilold lifted by derricks from the holds of ships. RENT close to & point of agreement on the | A3 CUBAN ECONOMIC ~ MOVE IS BUMORED Intervention Reports Revived by ) MachadoAdviser's Departure for United States. By the Assoclated Press. o HAVANA, October 10.—Rumors of some sort of “economic intervention” in Cuba were revived yesterday in con- nection with the departure of Senator Viriato Gutlerrez, leader in the sugar industry and one of President Macha- do's most trusted advisers, for the United States. Before he sailed, the Senator con- fel;l‘ed W‘I’th the Pr;seldent. n a decree to sent to Cunglun President Machado will demand d- get cuts and will suggest new taxes on ‘matches, gasoline, coffee and cigarettes. In the decree, the President, after detalling his suggestions, asks how “interior bankruptcy” can be prevent- ed unless his proposals are carried out. Gloves of differing colors are & new fashion in Paris, where one white and one black or one green and one biege | are_worn. longshoremen to agree with the ship | — [Enjoy a Delightful Breakfast, Luncheon, Dinner or Supper at 1107 Connecticat Ave. IN CLEAN EW BOTTLES 25 TILDEN GARDENS Unfurnished Apartments at Moderate Prices A decision to rent a limited number of 5, 6 and 7 room, 2-bath apartments in this lovely garden develop- ment was made when the rental season was well advanced. Hence a Range of Prices Lower Than Anything Comparable in Washington Applications solicited only from that class of people to whom ownership has been limited. Strict social references required Apply in Lobby—3900 Conn. Ave, or Phone Cleveland 5334 Rose Greely landscape architect One does not need to wait a hundred years for them to ripen into their ultimate beauty one of the outstanding developments of detached early American homes in the United States. 1t is not merely a detached residential section but has all the atmosphere and is typical of the Early American Village. GREATER VALUES cannot be found on today’s market at the low price we are offering these high class homes. $25,000 to $35,000 REATED and developed for those who appreciate supreme achievement and whose minds seek that elusive ntmosphere of the old Colony Hill will more than satisfy their longings and will bring within their means those types of the old masterpieces of Early American and Georgian Architecture that are grad- ually passing away. Flanked on the east by a valley forest of great trees, a United States Government Park, cool and inviting in its summer verdure, gloriously colorful in the ideal dlya of autumn, serene and lmpoemfl in its nlvery gray of wmter, a restful playground for woodland lovers at all times of the year, Whether depicting the puritanical stateliness of New England, or the breadth and cexdiality of the South, the Early American house has an indescribable charm, subtle in its appeal and when beauty is enhanced by the proper setting, velvety stretch of lawn, wonder- ful trees and an old fashioned garden there is nothing mére to be desired. All these things and more—the efficiency of the new—will be found on Colony Hill. BOSS & PHELPS 1417 K St. Creators and Exclusive Developers of Colony Hill and Foxhall Village 1705 Hoban Road Northwest OPEN Daily and Sunday 9 to ¢ Drive out Que St. to Wisconsin Ave., north one block to Reser- vosr-Road, west on Reservorr Road to Colony Hill (100 feet beyond 44th St.)